Tag: clean air zone

A couple of weeks ago the West Leeds Dispatch had an interview with Richard Lewis, Leeds City Council’s member for transport where he claimed that his changes designed to increase bus use on Bradford Road and Stanningley Road would help to reduce congestion. I’ve been doing some research into this and found that this isn’t necessarily the case. The way the West Yorkshire bus network operates may be taken for granted by the bus operators but as a passenger I find it alarming to say the least. What I have found is that:

Leeds decided to spend of the bulk of its money from the West Yorkshire Transport Fund on buses and bus priority measures while its “transport conversation” in 2016 was already in progress

Bus usage in Leeds is in long term decline and in certain parts of Stanningley Road it has fallen by 60% between 2000 – 2017

The bus companies see private cars as their main opposition and they lobby strongly to put their point across

Bus priority measures are deliberately designed to increase congestion for non-bus traffic

This is in contrast to the Department for Transport Clean Air Zone implementation guidelines which recommend allowing traffic to flow freely to reduce congestion

Leeds has a statutory duty to publish a local transport plan showing how they intend to keep traffic flowing freely. However their plans only go as far as trying to get more people on buses and they don’t have any contingency plans if bus usage continues to fall

These are obviously pretty bold claims so let’s have a look
at the evidence behind them.

A Bus
Delivery Partnership agreement formed between Leeds City Council,
First West Yorkshire and the West Yorkshire Combined Authority on the 5th
of December 2016 commits to spending the majority of the funding from the
cancelled trolley bus scheme on bus priority measures and to focus on buses in
highways planning. The Leeds Transport Conversation ended on the 11th
of November 2016 so this must have been decided as it was taking place. The First
Group annual report for 2018 actually states that the £173 million from
this scheme will be spent on buses and bus priority measures.

Figures from the DfT show that car use in the Leeds district has increased from 1,946,307 thousand vehicle miles in 2000 to 2,275,760 in 2017. Bus use has fallen from 21,700 in 2000 to 16,277 in 2017. On the stretch of road running from the end of Stanningley Bypass to Armley Prison car use fell from 19,555 thousand vehicle miles in 2000 to 15,548 in 2017, a decrease of 21%. Bus use fell from 747 thousand vehicle miles in 2000 to 293 in 2017, a decrease of 60%.

Let’s look at the Stanningley Road corridor in more detail. Since Armley Gyratory was built in the early 80s it has become the main route between Leeds and Bradford. Apart from a short stretch around Mike’s Carpets it is dual carriageway all the way to Stanningley Bypass. The extremely wide central reservation used to be used for trams. The 2+ lane was introduced in the late 90s. A study in 2002 for the Institute of Transport Studies at the University of Leeds found that it reduced journey times by 4 minutes and encouraged car sharing. A Freedom of Information Act request made in 2011 found that enforcement of the 2+ rule was extremely low and the fine for breaking it was only £30. Enforcement has largely been suspended but even when in operation it does not have a deterrent effect. One option that does not seem to have been considered is simply removing the 2+ lane and turning it back into a dual carriageway. Allowing traffic to flow freely along this route rather than narrowing it further will help to discourage rat running along Green Hill Road and Armley Town Street. The 2+ lane can currently be used by motorbikes. Converting it to a bus lane means that they will be forced into general traffic where they are more likely to have accidents. As a biker who uses this road fairly regularly this does cause me some concern.

The biggest bus companies in West Yorkshire are First Group
and Arriva. Yorkshire Tiger Buses is wholly owned by Arriva but you can’t use
tickets from one on the other. Stagecoach is the second biggest bus company in
the UK but doesn’t operate in West Yorkshire. The First
Group annual report for 2018 states that improved economic
conditions are a risk to bus use because they could result in increased
affordability for other forms of transport. It also states that one of their
main competitors is the private car and that increased competition may lead to
lost business, reduced revenue and reduced profitability.

Bus operators in West Yorkshire are represented by an organization called the Association of Bus Operators in West Yorkshire (ABOWY). It was formed in 2012 when the old West Yorkshire Integrated Transport Authority was proposing London-style bus franchising. Information about the ABOWY is difficult to find. Their website is offline and they are not listed as a limited company. Other metropolitan counties have similar organizations. The North East Bus Operators Association was set up in 2008 to oppose proposals by Tyne and Wear transport authority to introduce franchising. Their constitution is available online. The Greater Manchester Bus Operators Association is a limited company whose objects include “promoting, supporting or opposing legislative or other measures affecting the interests of members”, and “promoting, protecting and coordinating the interests of members”. The members are bus companies and none of the objects mention the interests of passengers or customers.

It could be argued that these are private companies who have the right to make a profit. However they receive a lot of public money through subsidies on unprofitable routes and concessionary fares. 24% of First Group’s revenue from buses comes from concessionary fare subsidies paid by cash-strapped local authorities. This equates to £211 million nationally. The West Yorkshire Combined Authority spent £74.8 million on subsidies and concessionary fares to bus companies in the financial year ending March 2018. The proposals for additional bus lanes will mean even more public money being spent on infrastructure that only they can use. With the long term decline in bus use it is a question worth asking whether the lobbying activities of the bus operators’ associations and their opposition to statutory regulation are for the benefit of passengers or an attempt to maintain the profits of their members.

One of the reasons the Supertram scheme was rejected was that First Leeds introduced a new “ftr” service along one of the proposed routes. These single decker bendy buses were redeployed from York to Leeds, and finally to Swansea where they were scrapped due to their high cost. They were eventually replaced with standard double decker buses. When the Trolley Bus system was proposed First borrowed a spare “Borismaster” bus and suggested they might introduce 200 of them across Leeds. This behaviour goes back to the points in their annual report that they really don’t like competition.

Congestion and air pollution is a major issue for Leeds. So
much so that a clean air zone will be introduced in December. The DfT
guidelines are pretty clear that the purpose is to improve air
quality rather than generating revenue. Any money raised from charging can only
be used to administer the scheme. Leeds will have a “Category B” clean air zone
which covers taxis, buses and heavy goods vehicles but not light goods
vehicles, private cars or motorbikes. Apart from encouraging use of less
polluting vehicles there are recommendations to improve traffic flow by
improving junctions, optimising traffic signalling to reduce queuing and so
forth.

Unfortunately bus priority measures are actually designed to
increase congestion of non-bus traffic. In 1997 the DfT published a document
called Keeping
Buses Moving. It states: “Giving priority to buses can cause other
traffic some additional delay which should be assessed and taken into account
in the overall appraisal. However, environmental considerations and overall
transport policy objectives for the area in question may thus strengthen the
case for providing priority for buses, even at the expense of delay to other
vehicles. Bus priority measures can themselves be a component in a demand
management strategy by reducing the road space available to cars.” In 2018 the
Chartered Institute of Highways and Transportation published another document
called Buses
In Urban Developments. This makes a number of recommendations to
limit non-bus traffic, such as reducing the amount of parking and raising
prices, diverting non-bus traffic to less direct routes, reducing speed limits,
building bus stop “boarders” out into the road to discourage parking and to
slow down other vehicles, and taking road space away. It is also worth pointing
out that the
latest proposals for Scott Hall Road include keeping it as 2 lanes
for general traffic in both directions between Street Lane and Potternewton
Lane to allow traffic to flow freely.

Local authorities are required to “secure the expeditious movement of traffic on the authority’s road network” under section 16 of the Traffic Management Act 2004 and to publish a local transport plan explaining how they will do this. This is backed up by other legislation such as the Local Transport Act 2008. This responsibility is shared between Leeds City Council and the West Yorkshire Combined Authority. The WYCA transport plan covers a range of measures covering roads and railways. The Leeds Transport Strategy is very vague in places and the only real concrete suggestions cover buses and cycle lanes. I put in a Freedom of Information Act request to ask what contingency plans or alternatives there are if bus use continues to fall and got back a couple of paragraphs of waffle which suggests they don’t have any. As mentioned above, bus priority measures are deliberately designed to slow down other forms of traffic. If usage continues to fall there is a danger of underutilized bus infrastructure alongside even more congested roads.

There is a need to sort out transport in Leeds and buses are
an important part of the Leeds transport network. However deciding that buses
are the answer before thinking about the question is not the right approach. Leeds
City Council needs to be more assertive with the bus operators rather than
simply rolling over and giving them what is good for their profitability. They
have lobbying organizations set up to resist regulated services and are not
averse to spoiler tactics to discourage competition. If bus usage continues to
fall, Leeds seriously needs to think about alternatives.